| Charles Baldwin on Thu, 26 Feb 2004 14:31:27 +0100 (CET) |
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| <nettime> Codework / Eco / Aquinas (fwd) |
"The inarticulate cry which seemed to be the voice of light." * Hermes
Trismegistus
I was thinking about codework presenting "its object and the inscription
of its object, both taken in the broadest sense," as Alan wrote
recently, and about the discussion of Eco. A while back I was working
out the relation of Eco's dissertation * published in book form in 1956,
later in English as _The Aesthetics of Thomas Aquinas_ - to his
semiotics. Note that first book appeared before Eco's turn to semiotics
(remember, he first adapts a kind of structuralist version of
information theory in _The Open Work_ [1962?] and then turns to
semiotics a few years later). The following is a perhaps too long
meditation on this connection, with the idea that it might contribute to
the discussion of Eco.
What interested me at the time was the importance of the Thomist notions
of manifestation, claritas, participation, proportion, and so on, for
semiotics and (differently) for media theory (where, separately from
Eco, McLuhan was also reading Aquinas, and claimed his goal was to
create a Thomist theory of media). The idea, for me, was that the
Thomist model provided the underlying dynamics for Eco and McLuhan, all
hinged around the metaphorics of light * i.e. the sense certainty and
immediacy (speed) of light was the guarantee that sign and material were
the same. (This works out differently for McLuhan vs. Eco: "light is a
medium without a message," so the inaccessibility of light [for McLuhan]
is what underwrite the more kinetic flip-flop theory of "the medium is
the message.")
The attraction of Aquinas was precisely the answer to how formal systems
participate with the world, an answer that deals with both the grounds
and the exteriority of sign systems. That is: codework was already the
issue, though under the guise of aesthetics rather than code *
aesthetics in the older sense of sensation / aisthesis and not
aesthetics in the sense of codified responses or artistic forms * or
rather, in the sense of the ground of these responses/forms. (I've
discussed this elsewhere in relation to "code aesthetics.") This is
precisely what interested me in my last post: attempting to resituate
the problem of semiotics in a general economy. Its also why the question
is semiotics' "reductiveness" is both entirely accurate and entirely
part of the puzzle rather than a reason to turn away from semiotics.
Here I'm going quickly and trying to bring up stuff from years back,
but: remember, the underlying concept is analogy, particularly
proportional analogy as analogy of being. (Here there's another
connection to be pursued in the trigger for Heidegger's Sein und Zeit in
Brentano's work on the analogy .) The analogy of being means a
"resonance" between proportionally arranged entities. "Proportionalitas
posits a similarity of relations between any terms whatever" (Ricoeur).
Entities in analogy participate, share being (participare = partem
capere). Aesthetic forms (or media) are the "extension" (participation)
of our senses. Human senses "delight in things duly proportioned as in
something akin to them; for, the sense, too, is a kind of reason as is
every cognitive power." So, proportionality of being leading to an
aesthetics of delight.
The working out of all this is the notion of manifestation, a quasi-
mystical translation between proportionalities enabling the whole
system. (I think here of the relation between code and AS's notion of
"plasma."). There's a whole lattice of connecting references here, a
whole history of formal / semiotic systems built on the Thomist notion
of participation/manifestation. One example: Panofsky's "symbolic form"
originates in his study of this Scholastic notion, in the idea that
Gothic cathedrals didn't simply represent thought but manifested thought
itself. The organization of the cathedral involved a "clarity" that
resonated immediately with viewers/participators. [Eco: "Clarity is the
fundamental communicability of form, which is made actual in relation to
someone's looking at or seeing of the object." "Claritas" is both reason
and the mystical dazzle of saint's bodies, both sign-form and
emanation.] From this Panofsky developed the notion of "habitus" as
"ways of thinkin!
g" or "arts of living." In turn, Bourdieu's entire theory is built on
this concept * habitus as "structuring structures" that "make
history" -- taking Panofsky but generalizing it from architecture. And
so on. (In addition, Panofsky, Eco, McLuhan, etc. all argue that
manifestation and clarification are at work in the organization of
writing as well * I'll return to this below.)
Now, here's the crux of the matter, a crux that enables semiotics but
remains a crux and remains the productive site for codework within and
across semiotics. Aquinas argued that sacred doctrine "makes use of
human reason, not to prove faith but to make clear (manifestare)
whatever else is set forth in this doctrine." The articles of faith, and
thus the analogy of being, cannot be made immediately evident, "for
thereby the merit of faith would come to an end" explains Aquinas.
Representations ('similitudines' for Aquinas; signs for Eco) are this
manifestation. The organization and reflexivity of signs is due to their
proportionality with the world. (I think here of AS's discussion of SR
qua Wittgenstein.)
The paradox here (Panofsky gets this too, but it's crucial to Eco's
semiotics) is the notion that manifestation will clarify faith, clarify
the underlying participation in being, but in doing so will *finally*
clarify faith (bring it to an end). This impossible need for
exemplification leads, in Panofsky's terms, to the "POSTULATE OF
CLARIFICATION FOR CLARIFICATION'S SAKE." Leaving Panofsky , I think it's
possible to see in Eco precisely this paradox enabling semiotics as an
intra-formal economy of proliferating signs. Everything must be
clarified / made into as sign, but (also) there always remains some
unclarity, guaranteeing a kind of momentum from being to sign.
Elaboration, i.e. the structures of signs systems, arises from
clarification. Semiotics is clarification * not in any particular sign
but in semiotics "itself" as the residue of clarification.
So, it seems to me that this is another historical approach to codework.
Again, for Eco, Panofsky, McLuhan, Aquinas as well, this whole complex
is transferred from the visual arts to the written arts * not that it
doesn't remain in the visual arts, but writing is increasingly where
this question is most intensely elaborated, where the impossible paradox
(above) is exemplified. To what degree is Eco's semiotics a concealed
continuation of a Thomist aesthetics? Read across the trajectory of
Eco's work, from the earliest text through the _Theory of Semiotics_:
every sign is a ghost emanation of being. Beyond this, there's another
related but different history explaining how the whole thing is staged
rhetorically, dissolving "being" into "performance," but that's probably
enough for now. Thanks for your patience.
Of course, as far as McLuhan goes, Ezra Pound wrote, following one of
Marshall's visits to St. Catherine's, "McL procedure is arcyFarcy /
whether poisoned by Thos d/Aquin or some other."
Sandy Baldwin
West Virginia University
Assistant Professor of English
359 Stansbury Hall
304-293-3107x452
Coordinator of the Center for Literary Computing
203 Armstrong Hall
304-293-3871
charles.baldwin@mail.wvu.edu
www.clc.wvu.edu
www.as.wvu.edu/~sbaldwin
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